rhetoric. it s very dangerous. the issue about medicare for all and particularly the eliminating fracking on day one which attacks blue collar, middle class american workers, you can t walk that back. so i agree, she s in for a tough fight to try to claim that. but bernie sanders wouldn t even try to claim. liz warren would, i think, make that argument ed: let s talk more about that sanders/warren dynamic and who s the real socialist, who s the real progressive. politico magazine talking about aoc s sanders endorsement won t change 2020, they say, but it might change the democratic party. this is a signal from the young guns in the democratic party to elizabeth warren that you re not progressive enough and that bernie sanders is the real deal. what say you? i read the article, and i think it was very smart thing for aoc, because don t believe bernie s campaign s going anywhere, but he has a lot of money, a lot of energy, a lot of young voters really backed up. but if that goes away
has changed so much, it has evolved, but if you listen to president obama talking about redirection of wealth and joe the plum orer and you play that now, that sounds moderate, no big deal. and now so quickly in this race, you already see that transition that warren s not enough. and i wonder how many people will actually listen to aoc and abandon elizabeth warren who has been rising in the polls significantly right behind joe biden. griff: i talked to a lot of people out there, we are going to show you later today, and you don t want to miss it, because they re no fans of elizabeth warren, they see her as a capitalist jedediah: heaven forbid. but that she is not the real deal as sanders is. and the most common comment i got is why would you vote for a lighter alternative when you can have the real deal? ed: by the way, they re not talking about joe biden, who s a front-runner, president trump is sitting there watching the impeachment drama play out that might backfire on the democ